Posted: 2005�26�October at 9:50am | IP Logged
|
|
|
Early Exposure to Combustion Gases Could
Predispose Children to Cancer
While they're pregnant,
women are advised to avoid alcohol, tobacco smoke, drugs, and caffeine to
prevent their unborn children from being exposed to harmful chemicals and
toxins. But just breathing polluted air could put your baby or young child at
increased risk for childhood cancer, according to recent research from the
University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom.
In 2001, the study researcher linked areas of Great
Britain where chemical emissions were high (called hotspots) to the addresses of
12,018 children born between 1955 and 1980 who died of leukemia, lymphoma, or
solid tumors before their 16th birthdays. Most of the emissions noted in the
study, such as carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, benzene, and 1,3-butadiene,
were generated from engine exhausts, especially diesel exhausts.
The results? Children exposed to emissions hotspots
- during the prenatal period or after birth - or industrial sites such as bus
and train stations, highways, and factories had a higher risk of developing
cancer in childhood. And children who were exposed to hotspot emissions and who
lived near industrial sites had an even greater risk of developing cancer. For
example, a child exposed to both the chemical 1,3-butadiene and living near a
bus station had more than 12 times the risk of developing childhood
cancer.
What This Means to You: The
results of this study suggest that 1,3-butadiene, a chemical made from the
processing of petroleum, may be one of the most dangerous atmospheric
emissions. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
breathing 1,3-butadiene during pregnancy can increase the risk of birth defects
and it's a known cancer-causing agent.
If your workplace exposes you to 1,3-butadiene,
carbon monoxide, benzene, or other dangerous pollutants or if you live near
industrial sites or areas with high levels of emissions (like bus stations or
highways), talk to your doctor about reducing your child's risk of
toxicity.
Source: E. G. Knox; Journal of Epidemiology and
Community Health, September 2005
Reviewed by: Steven Dowshen, MD Date
reviewed: October 2005
|